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U Nu

Nu (Burmese: ဦးနု; pronounced [ʔú nṵ]; 25 May 1907 – 14 February 1995), commonly known as U Nu and also by the honorific name Thakin Nu, was a leading Burmese statesman and nationalist politician. He was the first Prime Minister of Burma under the provisions of the 1947 Constitution of the Union of Burma, from 4 January 1948 to 12 June 1956, again from 28 February 1957 to 28 October 1958, and finally from 4 April 1960 to 2 March 1962.

Nu
ဦးနု
Prime Minister of Burma
In office
4 April 1960 – 2 March 1962
PresidentWin Maung
Preceded byNe Win
Succeeded byNe Win
In office
28 February 1957 – 28 October 1958
PresidentBa U
Preceded byBa Swe
Succeeded byNe Win
In office
4 January 1948 – 12 June 1956
PresidentSao Shwe Thaik
Ba U
Preceded byOffice established
Aung San as Premier of British Crown Colony of Burma
Succeeded byBa Swe
Personal details
Born(1907-05-25)25 May 1907
Wakema, Myaungmya District, British Burma
Died14 February 1995(1995-02-14) (aged 87)
Bahan Township, Yangon, Myanmar
NationalityBurmese
Political partyUnion Party (1958–1962/4)
Parliamentary Democracy Party (1969–1973)
Other political
affiliations
AFPFL (until 1958)
Spouse
Mya Yi
(m. 1935; died 1993)
ChildrenSan San Nu
Thaung Htaik
Maung Aung
Than Than Nu
Khin Aye Nu
Alma materUniversity of Rangoon
Religion

Biography edit

Nu was born to U San Tun and Daw Saw Khin of Wakema, Myaungmya District, British Burma. He attended Myoma High School in Yangon, and received a B.A. from Rangoon University in 1929.[1] In 1935 he married Mya Yi while studying for a Bachelor of Laws.

Political career edit

Struggle for independence edit

Nu's political life started as president of the Rangoon University Students Union (RUSU) with M. A. Rashid as vice-president and U Thi Han as the general secretary. Aung San was editor and publicity officer. Nu and Aung San were both expelled from the university after an article, Hell Hound At Large, appeared in the union magazine, which was obviously about the rector. Their expulsion sparked off the second university students' strike in February 1936. Aung San and Nu became members of the nationalist Dobama Asiayone (Our Burma Association) which had been formed in 1930 and henceforth gained the prefix Thakin ('Master'), proclaiming they were the true masters of their own land. For a few years after independence in 1948 Nu retained the prefix 'Thakin', but around 1952 he announced that since Burma was already independent the prefix of 'Thakin' was no longer needed and henceforth he would be known as U ('Mr') Nu. In 1937 he co-founded with Thakin Than Tun the Nagani (Red Dragon) Book Club which for the first time widely circulated Burmese-language translations of the Marxist classics. He also became a leader and co-founder of the People's Revolutionary Party (PRP), which later became the Socialist Party, and the umbrella organisation the Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League (AFPFL), which advocated Burmese independence from both Japanese and British control during the 1940s. He was detained by the colonial government in 1940 along with Thakin Soe, Thakin Than Tun, Kyaw Nyein, U Măd, and Ba Maw. The prison holding Nu was largely abandoned by the British in the course of the rapid Japanese advance.[2]

From August 1943, when the Japanese declared nominal independence for Burma under a regime led by Ba Maw, Nu was appointed foreign minister. In 1944 he was appointed minister of information until the open rebellion by the AFPFL against the Japanese military in March 1945. Though aware of the resistance and in contact with its leaders, Nu did not actively participate in the underground activities of the AFPFL up to the rebellion, and unlike its leading figure Aung San, did not join the rebellion and move to areas under Allied control.[3] Instead, Nu retreated with the Japanese and Ba Maw in late April, 1945.[4] Nu was nearly killed on August 12, 1945, when Allied pilots strafed and destroyed the house Ba Maw had been given by the retreating Japanese, but both escaped the residence during the attack. Following Japanese surrender, Nu retired from politics for a time, writing his memoirs of the war years, Burma Under the Japanese and tracts on Marxism. As a popular figure with early connections to Aung San and other nationalists from their student days, however, Nu was drawn back into the politics of the AFPFL where he initially struggled to keep its Communist contingent within the party.[5]

 
Mahatma Gandhi with Thakin Nu, Premier of Burma, at Birla House, Delhi, December 4, 1947

After the assassination of its political and military leader Aung San along with his cabinet ministers on 19 July 1947, U Nu led the AFPFL and signed an independence agreement (the Nu-Attlee Treaty) with the British Premier Clement Attlee in October 1947.[6]

Parliamentary era edit

 
U Nu with Moshe Dayan during his visit to Israel in 1955
 
U Nu with Soviet leaders Nikita Khrushchev (far left with floral lei) and Nikolai Bulganin (right with floral lei) in Rangoon, December 1955
 
U Nu in Bandung, Indonesia for the 1955 Asian–African Conference

Burma gained independence from Britain on 4 January 1948. U Nu became the chairman of the Old Myoma Students Association in Yangon. He became the first Prime Minister of independent Burma, and he had to deal with armed rebellion. The rebels included various ethnic groups, White Flag and Red Flag communist factions, and some regiments in the Army. Yet another challenge was the exiled Kuomintang (KMT). After being chased out of (Mainland) China by the victorious Communists, they had established bases in eastern Burma, and it took several years in the early 1950s to drive them out. A democratic system was instituted and parliamentary elections were held several times. Throughout the 1950s, U Nu oversaw the implementation of the Pyidawtha Plan, a national economic development plan to establish an industrial welfare state in Burma.

He voluntarily relinquished the Prime Ministerial position in 1956. He was one of the leaders of the Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League (AFPFL) from 1942 to 1963. AFPFL member Ba Swe served as Prime Minister from June 1956 to June 1957. In 1955, the University of Belgrade (Yugoslavia) awarded him an honorary doctorate.[7]

On 26 September 1958, he asked the Army Chief of Staff General Ne Win to take over as a "caretaker government", and Ne Win was sworn in as Prime Minister on 27 October 1958. In the February 1960 general election, U Nu's Clean faction of the AFPFL won in a landslide victory over the Stable faction led by U Ba Swe and Kyaw Nyein. U Nu returned to power forming the Pyidaungzu (Union) government on 4 April 1960. The Clean AFPFL was subsequently renamed the Union Party.

U Thant had been Secretary to the Prime Minister U Nu before he was appointed Burmese Ambassador to the United Nations in 1957. U Thant became the third UN Secretary-General in 1961. U Nu participated in the 1st Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement in 1961 in Belgrade making Burma one of the founding members of the Non-Aligned Movement.

In 1961, U Nu made briefly made Buddhism the state religion and caused dissent amongst Christian Kachin nationalists and was one of the main factors for the Kachin conflict.[8]

Military era edit

 
U Nu in January 1962, less than 2 weeks before the second military coup

Less than two years after his election victory, U Nu was overthrown by a coup d'état led by General Ne Win on 2 March 1962. After the 1962 coup, U Nu was put in what was euphemistically called 'protective custody' in an army camp outside Rangoon. He was released more than four years later on 27 October 1966[9]. Among others, on the day of the military coup on 2 March 1962 President Mahn Win Maung as well as Chief Justice U Myint Thein (22 February 1900 – 3 October 1994) was also put in 'protective custody'. Win Maung was released from detention in October 1967 and Myint Thein not until 28 February 1968.

On 2 December 1968, Ne Win appointed U Nu to the 33-man Internal Unity Advisory Board to advise on suggestions for internal unity and political change. In February 1969, U Nu submitted a report recommending that power be handed back to him and that the Parliament abolished by Ne Win in March 1962 be reconvened to appoint Ne Win as president to remove the 'taint' of Ne Win's government being 'usurpers'.[10] Soon after submitting his report, U Nu, feigning illness, and under the pretext of a pilgrimage to India left Burma for India. When Ne Win made no response to his report, U Nu left India for London.[citation needed]

In a London press conference on 27 August 1969, U Nu announced that he was the 'legal Prime Minister' and pledged that he would not give up his struggle for democracy in Burma and that Burma was under the 'same kind of fascism' that General Aung San had fought.[citation needed] In November 1969, Ne Win formally rejected U Nu's proposal, saying that he took over power – and held on to it – not because he craved power but to uplift the welfare of the 'workers and peasants' and that U Nu's proposals amounted to 'turning back the wheel'.[citation needed]

U Nu then used former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) official Bill Young to help him raise international funding for founding the United National Liberation Front (UNLF). By the end of 1970, they had garnered more than $2 million.[11]

U Nu later formed the Parliamentary Democracy Party (PDP) and led an armed resistance group. U Nu's 'resistance group' consisted of no more than several hundred or at most a few thousand at its peak and his avowal to fight and overthrow Ne Win from the Thai border met with abject failure. He subsequently accepted an offer of amnesty granted by Ne Win and returned to Burma on 29 July 1980.[12]

8888 Uprising edit

After keeping a low profile, teaching Buddhism in Burma and the United States – U Nu visited Northern Illinois University in the US to lecture on Buddhism in 1987 – U Nu became once again politically active during the 8888 Uprising forming the first new political party, the League for Democracy and Peace (LDP). Echoing his assertion that he was the 'legal Prime Minister' of August 1969 in London, U Nu reiterated on 9 September 1988 in Rangoon that he was still the 'legal Prime Minister'.

U Nu initiated to form an interim government and invited opposition leaders to join him. Indian Prime minister Rajiv Gandhi had already signaled his readiness to recognize the interim government and Burmese troops started to change sides with Burmese Navy almost totally siding with the opposition. However, Aung San Suu Kyi categorically rejected U Nu's plan by saying "the future of the opposition would be decided by masses of the people". Ex-Brigadier Aung Gyi, another opposition politician at the time of the 8888 crisis, followed and rejected the plan after Suu Kyi's refusal. Crucial months were passed on the street and the interim government was not internationally recognized due to lack of support from opposition. Political analyst Susanne Prager-Nyein described Aung San Suu Kyi's refusal as "a major strategic mistake".[13]

Nonetheless U Nu formed his own 'government' reappointing Mahn Win Maung who was overthrown in the 1962 coup as 'President'. After the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) took over power on 18 September 1988, the SLORC repeatedly asked U Nu to formally 'abolish' his 'interim government', but U Nu refused to do so. As a result, Nu was put under house arrest on 29 December 1989. SLORC spokesmen at that time stated that although U Nu could have been tried for 'treason', due to his advanced age and his contribution to the freedom struggle, he was not charged with that offence. He was released on 23 April 1992 the same day the SLORC Chairman Senior General Saw Maung was forced to relinquish power and replaced by military junta (officially named the State Peace and Development Council) chief Senior General Than Shwe.

Religious works edit

 
U Nu paying obeisance to the Buddha in 1961 ceremonies marking Vesak.

A devout Theravada Buddhist, U Nu had long been popular with the buddhist majority of the country. In 1950, with the Karen Uprising, the Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League controlled Parliament launched a Peace Within One Year campaign, involving various military actions and governmental reforms. Amongst this backdrop, U Nu combined orders for military equipment from India with a request to receive Buddhist relics on loan. U Nu toured the relics around the country, reaching into the stable parts of the countryside were ethnic unrest was still present, hoping to inspire peace through the power of the Buddha.[14]

He had the Kaba Aye Pagoda and the Maha Pasana Guha (Great Cave) built in 1952 in preparation for the Sixth Buddhist Synod that he convened and hosted in 1954–1956 as prime minister. In a 1957 interview with American news broadcast See It Now, he stated that:[15]

Had it not been for my faith, I would have been finished in 1948, 1949, and 1950 when the insurrection was in its height.

He also stated that although he was born Buddhist, he was particularly attracted by the Kalama Sutta, a Buddhist doctrine that challenges believers to actively question their beliefs and views instead of passively accepting them:[15]

You must not believe anything which you cannot test yourself.

On 29 August 1961, Parliament passed the State Religion Promotion Act of 1961, initiated by U Nu himself.[16] This act made Buddhism the official state religion of the country, one of his election campaign promises as well as instated the Buddhist lunar calendar by official observance of the so-called Buddhist sabbath days, or Uposatha, in lieu of the Christian Sabbath day, Sunday. On Uposatha days, state broadcasting radio was required to dedicate its airtime to religious programs, while state schools and government offices were closed, and liquor was not allowed to be served in public spaces.[16] The act also required government schools to teach Buddhist students the Buddhist scriptures, banned the slaughtering of cattle (beef became known as todo tha (burmese:တိုးတိုးသား); lit. hush hush meat), and commuted death sentences for parolees.[17]

Beyond stately actions, U Nu also took to fulfil the Buddhist ideal of the Chakravartin by engaging in personal merit-making and increasingly strong vows of celibacy to atone for the sins of the nation and to bring stability to his rule through religious devotion.[18]

When General Ne Win took over in 1962, one of his first acts was to repeal the Buddhist acts that had passed under U Nu's administration, including the ban on cow slaughtering and declaration of Buddhism as the state religion, as they had alienated largely Christian ethnic minorities such as the Kachins and the Karens, and perhaps was symbolic of a personality clash between Nu and Ne Win.

Literary works edit

U Nu authored several books some of which have been translated into English. Among his works are The People Win Through (1951), Burma under the Japanese (1954), An Asian Speaks (1955), and Burma Looks Ahead (1951). His autobiography (1907–1962) Ta-Tei Sanei Tha (Naughty Saturday-born) was published in India by Irrawaddy Publishing (U Maw Thiri) in 1975. An earlier version had been published in 1974; it was translated into English by U Law Yone, Editor of the (Rangoon) Nation till 1963 and who, like U Nu, was jailed by the Revolutionary Council in the 1960s. Before U Nu became Prime Minister, he had translated, in the late 1930s, Dale Carnegie's book, How to Win Friends and Influence People (Lupaw Luzaw Louknee in Burmese – in retranslation, it roughly meant 'How to Take Advantage of Man by Man'); later the translated name was changed to the more palatable 'Meikta Bala Htika' which can be retranslated as A Treatise on Friendly Social Contract. The translated work under the second title became a prescribed text in schools in the 1950s as was U Nu's original work in Burmese, The People Win Through or The Sound of the People Victorious (Ludu Aungthan). He organized a Burma Translation Society and first volume of Burmese Encyclopedia published in 1954. The Sarpay Beikhman continued those works.

Novelist and playwright edit

Besides serving as Prime Minister, U Nu was also an accomplished novelist and playwright. In a work from the colonial period titled Yesset pabeikwe or It's So Cruel (Man, the Wolf of Man) U Nu describes how during the colonial period rich landlords were able to get away with just about any crime they wished to perpetrate.

The play The Sound of the People Victorious (Ludu Aungthan) that U Nu wrote while he was Prime Minister is about the havoc that Communist ideologies can wreak in a family. Strangely enough the first production of the play seems to have been in Pasadena, California. It later became a popular comic book in Burma, was translated into English, and made into a feature film at the height of the Cold War in the 1950s. The older generation in Burma can still remember having studied the play in their schooldays.

In the play Thaka Ala, published just before the 1962 coup, U Nu paints an extremely ugly picture of corruption both amongst the high-ranking politicians in power at the time as well as among the communist leaders who were gaining ascendancy. This is a play in the vernacular, a genre that hardly exists in Burmese literature. A translation into English was published in instalments in the Guardian newspaper. The play was critical of the current state of politics in Burma at the time (around 1960) and in this critical stance it resembles Thein Pe Myint's The Modern Monk (Tet Hpongyi in Burmese). Like The Modern Monk, it deals with scandalous sexual liaisons not much in keeping with traditional modes of Burmese behaviour.One of the greatest female writers of the Post-colonial period is Journalgyaw Ma Ma Lay. Khin Myo Chit was another important writer, who wrote, among her works, The 13-Carat Diamond (1955), which was translated into many languages. The journalist Ludu U Hla was the author of numerous volumes of ethnic minority folklore, novels about inmates in U Nu-era jails, and biographies of people working in different occupations. The Prime Minister U Nu himself wrote several politically oriented plays and novels.

Death edit

 
Mya Yi, ca. 1955.

Nu died of natural causes on 14 February 1995 at his home in Yangon's Bahan Township at the age of 87, after his wife Mya Yi (1910–1993) died.[19] They had five children, San San (daughter), Thaung Htaik (son), Maung Aung (son), Than Than (daughter) and Cho Cho (daughter).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Parrott-Sheffer, Chelsey (2009). "U Nu". Britannica. Retrieved 10 January 2023.
  2. ^ Thakin Nu. Burma Under the Japanese, 15.
  3. ^ Richard Butwell. U Nu of Burma, 44–45.
  4. ^ Thakin Nu. Burma Under the Japanese, 108.
  5. ^ Richard Butwell. U Nu of Burma, 52.
  6. ^ . peoplewinthrough.com. Archived from the original on December 20, 2021. Retrieved Jan 8, 2023.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-05-03. Retrieved 2012-06-11.
  8. ^ Smith, Martin (1999-06-01). Burma: Insurgency and the Politics of Ethnicity. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 158. ISBN 978-1-85649-660-5.
  9. ^ see the (Rangoon) Guardian and The Working People's Daily of 28 October 1966 concerning the news items of U Nu's release from custody
  10. ^ The English translation of U Nu's 'interim report' or proposals could be read in the 3 June 1969 issues of the Rangoon Guardian and the Working People's Daily
  11. ^ McCoy, Alfred W. (2003). The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade. Lawrence Hill Books. ISBN 1-55652-483-8.
  12. ^ The news item that "former Prime Minister U Nu and wife Mya Yi arrving [sic?] back at Rangoon airport at 3:30 pm in the afternoon of 29 July 1980" can be read in the 30 July 1980 issues of the Rangoon Guardian and the Working People's Daily.
  13. ^ Prager-Nyein, Susanne (Feb 2013). "Aung San Suu Kyi: Between Biographical Myth and Hard Realities". Journal of Contemporary Asia. 3 (43): 546–554. doi:10.1080/00472336.2013.771942. S2CID 154402781.
  14. ^ Frasch, Tilman (2013). John Whalen-Bridge and Phana Kit'asa (ed.). The Relic and the Rule of Righteousness: Reflections on U Nu's Dhammavijaya. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 127–128.
  15. ^ a b "Burma, Buddhism, and Neutralism". See It Now. Youtube. 3 February 1957. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 12 August 2011.
  16. ^ a b Sahliyeh, Emile F. (1990). Religious resurgence and politics in the contemporary world. SUNY Press. pp. 39–40. ISBN 978-0-7914-0382-2.
  17. ^ King, Winston L. (2001). In the hope of Nibbana: the ethics of Theravada Buddhism. Vol. 2. Pariyatti. p. 295. ISBN 978-1-928706-08-3.
  18. ^ Smith, Donald Eugene (1965). Religion and Politics in Burma. Princeton University Press. p. 142.
  19. ^ U Nu Dies, Reuters, February 14, 1995

Further reading edit

  • Butwell, Richard (1969). U Nu of Burma. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Cady, John (1960). A History of Modern Burma. Cornell University Press.
  • Charney, Michael W. (2009). "Ludu Aung Than: Nu's Burma During the Cold War". In Christopher E. Goscha; Christian F. Ostermann (eds.). Connecting Histories: Decolonization and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, 1945–1962. Washington, DC & Stanford California: Woodrow Wilson Center Press & Stanford University Press. pp. 335–355..
  • Hunter, Edward (1957) The People Win Through: a play by U Nu (New York: Taplinger Publishing Co).
  • Smith, Martin (1999). Burma: Insurgency and the Politics of Ethnicity. Dhaka: University Press. ISBN 1-85649-659-7.
  • Tinker, Hugh (1957). The Union of Burma. Oxford University Press.

External links edit

  • Time Magazine cover
  • Time magazine cover story, August 30, 1954
  • U Nu's speech on Burmese independence, January 4, 1948
  • U Nu – Centennial Birthday May 25, 2007 December 20, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • The Columbia Encyclopedia
  • Encyclopædia Britannica article
  • Burma Looks Ahead
  • Thaka-Ala, a political satire by U Nu
  • BookRags – U Nu
  • U Nu's hundred of photo gallery at www.pbase.com
Political offices
Preceded by
office created
Prime Minister of Burma
1948–1956
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Burma
1957–1958
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Burma
1960–1962
Succeeded by

this, article, about, first, prime, minister, burma, other, people, with, burmese, name, burmese, name, this, burmese, name, honorific, given, name, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please. This article is about the first Prime Minister of Burma For other people with the Burmese name Nu see Nu Burmese name In this Burmese name U is an honorific not a given name This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nu Burmese ဦ န pronounced ʔu nṵ 25 May 1907 14 February 1995 commonly known as U Nu and also by the honorific name Thakin Nu was a leading Burmese statesman and nationalist politician He was the first Prime Minister of Burma under the provisions of the 1947 Constitution of the Union of Burma from 4 January 1948 to 12 June 1956 again from 28 February 1957 to 28 October 1958 and finally from 4 April 1960 to 2 March 1962 UNuဦ န Prime Minister of BurmaIn office 4 April 1960 2 March 1962PresidentWin MaungPreceded byNe WinSucceeded byNe WinIn office 28 February 1957 28 October 1958PresidentBa UPreceded byBa SweSucceeded byNe WinIn office 4 January 1948 12 June 1956PresidentSao Shwe ThaikBa UPreceded byOffice establishedAung San as Premier of British Crown Colony of BurmaSucceeded byBa SwePersonal detailsBorn 1907 05 25 25 May 1907Wakema Myaungmya District British BurmaDied14 February 1995 1995 02 14 aged 87 Bahan Township Yangon MyanmarNationalityBurmesePolitical partyUnion Party 1958 1962 4 Parliamentary Democracy Party 1969 1973 Other politicalaffiliationsAFPFL until 1958 SpouseMya Yi m 1935 died 1993 wbr ChildrenSan San NuThaung HtaikMaung AungThan Than NuKhin Aye NuAlma materUniversity of RangoonReligionTheravada BuddhismThis article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script Contents 1 Biography 2 Political career 2 1 Struggle for independence 2 2 Parliamentary era 2 3 Military era 2 4 8888 Uprising 3 Religious works 4 Literary works 4 1 Novelist and playwright 5 Death 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography editNu was born to U San Tun and Daw Saw Khin of Wakema Myaungmya District British Burma He attended Myoma High School in Yangon and received a B A from Rangoon University in 1929 1 In 1935 he married Mya Yi while studying for a Bachelor of Laws Political career editStruggle for independence edit Nu s political life started as president of the Rangoon University Students Union RUSU with M A Rashid as vice president and U Thi Han as the general secretary Aung San was editor and publicity officer Nu and Aung San were both expelled from the university after an article Hell Hound At Large appeared in the union magazine which was obviously about the rector Their expulsion sparked off the second university students strike in February 1936 Aung San and Nu became members of the nationalist Dobama Asiayone Our Burma Association which had been formed in 1930 and henceforth gained the prefix Thakin Master proclaiming they were the true masters of their own land For a few years after independence in 1948 Nu retained the prefix Thakin but around 1952 he announced that since Burma was already independent the prefix of Thakin was no longer needed and henceforth he would be known as U Mr Nu In 1937 he co founded with Thakin Than Tun the Nagani Red Dragon Book Club which for the first time widely circulated Burmese language translations of the Marxist classics He also became a leader and co founder of the People s Revolutionary Party PRP which later became the Socialist Party and the umbrella organisation the Anti Fascist People s Freedom League AFPFL which advocated Burmese independence from both Japanese and British control during the 1940s He was detained by the colonial government in 1940 along with Thakin Soe Thakin Than Tun Kyaw Nyein U Măd and Ba Maw The prison holding Nu was largely abandoned by the British in the course of the rapid Japanese advance 2 From August 1943 when the Japanese declared nominal independence for Burma under a regime led by Ba Maw Nu was appointed foreign minister In 1944 he was appointed minister of information until the open rebellion by the AFPFL against the Japanese military in March 1945 Though aware of the resistance and in contact with its leaders Nu did not actively participate in the underground activities of the AFPFL up to the rebellion and unlike its leading figure Aung San did not join the rebellion and move to areas under Allied control 3 Instead Nu retreated with the Japanese and Ba Maw in late April 1945 4 Nu was nearly killed on August 12 1945 when Allied pilots strafed and destroyed the house Ba Maw had been given by the retreating Japanese but both escaped the residence during the attack Following Japanese surrender Nu retired from politics for a time writing his memoirs of the war years Burma Under the Japanese and tracts on Marxism As a popular figure with early connections to Aung San and other nationalists from their student days however Nu was drawn back into the politics of the AFPFL where he initially struggled to keep its Communist contingent within the party 5 nbsp Mahatma Gandhi with Thakin Nu Premier of Burma at Birla House Delhi December 4 1947After the assassination of its political and military leader Aung San along with his cabinet ministers on 19 July 1947 U Nu led the AFPFL and signed an independence agreement the Nu Attlee Treaty with the British Premier Clement Attlee in October 1947 6 Parliamentary era edit nbsp U Nu with Moshe Dayan during his visit to Israel in 1955 nbsp U Nu with Soviet leaders Nikita Khrushchev far left with floral lei and Nikolai Bulganin right with floral lei in Rangoon December 1955 nbsp U Nu in Bandung Indonesia for the 1955 Asian African ConferenceBurma gained independence from Britain on 4 January 1948 U Nu became the chairman of the Old Myoma Students Association in Yangon He became the first Prime Minister of independent Burma and he had to deal with armed rebellion The rebels included various ethnic groups White Flag and Red Flag communist factions and some regiments in the Army Yet another challenge was the exiled Kuomintang KMT After being chased out of Mainland China by the victorious Communists they had established bases in eastern Burma and it took several years in the early 1950s to drive them out A democratic system was instituted and parliamentary elections were held several times Throughout the 1950s U Nu oversaw the implementation of the Pyidawtha Plan a national economic development plan to establish an industrial welfare state in Burma He voluntarily relinquished the Prime Ministerial position in 1956 He was one of the leaders of the Anti Fascist People s Freedom League AFPFL from 1942 to 1963 AFPFL member Ba Swe served as Prime Minister from June 1956 to June 1957 In 1955 the University of Belgrade Yugoslavia awarded him an honorary doctorate 7 On 26 September 1958 he asked the Army Chief of Staff General Ne Win to take over as a caretaker government and Ne Win was sworn in as Prime Minister on 27 October 1958 In the February 1960 general election U Nu s Clean faction of the AFPFL won in a landslide victory over the Stable faction led by U Ba Swe and Kyaw Nyein U Nu returned to power forming the Pyidaungzu Union government on 4 April 1960 The Clean AFPFL was subsequently renamed the Union Party U Thant had been Secretary to the Prime Minister U Nu before he was appointed Burmese Ambassador to the United Nations in 1957 U Thant became the third UN Secretary General in 1961 U Nu participated in the 1st Summit of the Non Aligned Movement in 1961 in Belgrade making Burma one of the founding members of the Non Aligned Movement In 1961 U Nu made briefly made Buddhism the state religion and caused dissent amongst Christian Kachin nationalists and was one of the main factors for the Kachin conflict 8 Military era edit nbsp U Nu in January 1962 less than 2 weeks before the second military coupLess than two years after his election victory U Nu was overthrown by a coup d etat led by General Ne Win on 2 March 1962 After the 1962 coup U Nu was put in what was euphemistically called protective custody in an army camp outside Rangoon He was released more than four years later on 27 October 1966 9 Among others on the day of the military coup on 2 March 1962 President Mahn Win Maung as well as Chief Justice U Myint Thein 22 February 1900 3 October 1994 was also put in protective custody Win Maung was released from detention in October 1967 and Myint Thein not until 28 February 1968 On 2 December 1968 Ne Win appointed U Nu to the 33 man Internal Unity Advisory Board to advise on suggestions for internal unity and political change In February 1969 U Nu submitted a report recommending that power be handed back to him and that the Parliament abolished by Ne Win in March 1962 be reconvened to appoint Ne Win as president to remove the taint of Ne Win s government being usurpers 10 Soon after submitting his report U Nu feigning illness and under the pretext of a pilgrimage to India left Burma for India When Ne Win made no response to his report U Nu left India for London citation needed In a London press conference on 27 August 1969 U Nu announced that he was the legal Prime Minister and pledged that he would not give up his struggle for democracy in Burma and that Burma was under the same kind of fascism that General Aung San had fought citation needed In November 1969 Ne Win formally rejected U Nu s proposal saying that he took over power and held on to it not because he craved power but to uplift the welfare of the workers and peasants and that U Nu s proposals amounted to turning back the wheel citation needed U Nu then used former Central Intelligence Agency CIA official Bill Young to help him raise international funding for founding the United National Liberation Front UNLF By the end of 1970 they had garnered more than 2 million 11 U Nu later formed the Parliamentary Democracy Party PDP and led an armed resistance group U Nu s resistance group consisted of no more than several hundred or at most a few thousand at its peak and his avowal to fight and overthrow Ne Win from the Thai border met with abject failure He subsequently accepted an offer of amnesty granted by Ne Win and returned to Burma on 29 July 1980 12 8888 Uprising edit Main article 8888 Uprising After keeping a low profile teaching Buddhism in Burma and the United States U Nu visited Northern Illinois University in the US to lecture on Buddhism in 1987 U Nu became once again politically active during the 8888 Uprising forming the first new political party the League for Democracy and Peace LDP Echoing his assertion that he was the legal Prime Minister of August 1969 in London U Nu reiterated on 9 September 1988 in Rangoon that he was still the legal Prime Minister U Nu initiated to form an interim government and invited opposition leaders to join him Indian Prime minister Rajiv Gandhi had already signaled his readiness to recognize the interim government and Burmese troops started to change sides with Burmese Navy almost totally siding with the opposition However Aung San Suu Kyi categorically rejected U Nu s plan by saying the future of the opposition would be decided by masses of the people Ex Brigadier Aung Gyi another opposition politician at the time of the 8888 crisis followed and rejected the plan after Suu Kyi s refusal Crucial months were passed on the street and the interim government was not internationally recognized due to lack of support from opposition Political analyst Susanne Prager Nyein described Aung San Suu Kyi s refusal as a major strategic mistake 13 Nonetheless U Nu formed his own government reappointing Mahn Win Maung who was overthrown in the 1962 coup as President After the State Law and Order Restoration Council SLORC took over power on 18 September 1988 the SLORC repeatedly asked U Nu to formally abolish his interim government but U Nu refused to do so As a result Nu was put under house arrest on 29 December 1989 SLORC spokesmen at that time stated that although U Nu could have been tried for treason due to his advanced age and his contribution to the freedom struggle he was not charged with that offence He was released on 23 April 1992 the same day the SLORC Chairman Senior General Saw Maung was forced to relinquish power and replaced by military junta officially named the State Peace and Development Council chief Senior General Than Shwe Religious works edit nbsp U Nu paying obeisance to the Buddha in 1961 ceremonies marking Vesak A devout Theravada Buddhist U Nu had long been popular with the buddhist majority of the country In 1950 with the Karen Uprising the Anti Fascist People s Freedom League controlled Parliament launched a Peace Within One Year campaign involving various military actions and governmental reforms Amongst this backdrop U Nu combined orders for military equipment from India with a request to receive Buddhist relics on loan U Nu toured the relics around the country reaching into the stable parts of the countryside were ethnic unrest was still present hoping to inspire peace through the power of the Buddha 14 He had the Kaba Aye Pagoda and the Maha Pasana Guha Great Cave built in 1952 in preparation for the Sixth Buddhist Synod that he convened and hosted in 1954 1956 as prime minister In a 1957 interview with American news broadcast See It Now he stated that 15 Had it not been for my faith I would have been finished in 1948 1949 and 1950 when the insurrection was in its height He also stated that although he was born Buddhist he was particularly attracted by the Kalama Sutta a Buddhist doctrine that challenges believers to actively question their beliefs and views instead of passively accepting them 15 You must not believe anything which you cannot test yourself On 29 August 1961 Parliament passed the State Religion Promotion Act of 1961 initiated by U Nu himself 16 This act made Buddhism the official state religion of the country one of his election campaign promises as well as instated the Buddhist lunar calendar by official observance of the so called Buddhist sabbath days or Uposatha in lieu of the Christian Sabbath day Sunday On Uposatha days state broadcasting radio was required to dedicate its airtime to religious programs while state schools and government offices were closed and liquor was not allowed to be served in public spaces 16 The act also required government schools to teach Buddhist students the Buddhist scriptures banned the slaughtering of cattle beef became known as todo tha burmese တ တ သ lit hush hush meat and commuted death sentences for parolees 17 Beyond stately actions U Nu also took to fulfil the Buddhist ideal of the Chakravartin by engaging in personal merit making and increasingly strong vows of celibacy to atone for the sins of the nation and to bring stability to his rule through religious devotion 18 When General Ne Win took over in 1962 one of his first acts was to repeal the Buddhist acts that had passed under U Nu s administration including the ban on cow slaughtering and declaration of Buddhism as the state religion as they had alienated largely Christian ethnic minorities such as the Kachins and the Karens and perhaps was symbolic of a personality clash between Nu and Ne Win Literary works editU Nu authored several books some of which have been translated into English Among his works are The People Win Through 1951 Burma under the Japanese 1954 An Asian Speaks 1955 and Burma Looks Ahead 1951 His autobiography 1907 1962 Ta Tei Sanei Tha Naughty Saturday born was published in India by Irrawaddy Publishing U Maw Thiri in 1975 An earlier version had been published in 1974 it was translated into English by U Law Yone Editor of the Rangoon Nation till 1963 and who like U Nu was jailed by the Revolutionary Council in the 1960s Before U Nu became Prime Minister he had translated in the late 1930s Dale Carnegie s book How to Win Friends and Influence People Lupaw Luzaw Louknee in Burmese in retranslation it roughly meant How to Take Advantage of Man by Man later the translated name was changed to the more palatable Meikta Bala Htika which can be retranslated as A Treatise on Friendly Social Contract The translated work under the second title became a prescribed text in schools in the 1950s as was U Nu s original work in Burmese The People Win Through or The Sound of the People Victorious Ludu Aungthan He organized a Burma Translation Society and first volume of Burmese Encyclopedia published in 1954 The Sarpay Beikhman continued those works Novelist and playwright edit Besides serving as Prime Minister U Nu was also an accomplished novelist and playwright In a work from the colonial period titled Yesset pabeikwe or It s So Cruel Man the Wolf of Man U Nu describes how during the colonial period rich landlords were able to get away with just about any crime they wished to perpetrate The play The Sound of the People Victorious Ludu Aungthan that U Nu wrote while he was Prime Minister is about the havoc that Communist ideologies can wreak in a family Strangely enough the first production of the play seems to have been in Pasadena California It later became a popular comic book in Burma was translated into English and made into a feature film at the height of the Cold War in the 1950s The older generation in Burma can still remember having studied the play in their schooldays In the play Thaka Ala published just before the 1962 coup U Nu paints an extremely ugly picture of corruption both amongst the high ranking politicians in power at the time as well as among the communist leaders who were gaining ascendancy This is a play in the vernacular a genre that hardly exists in Burmese literature A translation into English was published in instalments in the Guardian newspaper The play was critical of the current state of politics in Burma at the time around 1960 and in this critical stance it resembles Thein Pe Myint s The Modern Monk Tet Hpongyi in Burmese Like The Modern Monk it deals with scandalous sexual liaisons not much in keeping with traditional modes of Burmese behaviour One of the greatest female writers of the Post colonial period is Journalgyaw Ma Ma Lay Khin Myo Chit was another important writer who wrote among her works The 13 Carat Diamond 1955 which was translated into many languages The journalist Ludu U Hla was the author of numerous volumes of ethnic minority folklore novels about inmates in U Nu era jails and biographies of people working in different occupations The Prime Minister U Nu himself wrote several politically oriented plays and novels Death edit nbsp Mya Yi ca 1955 Nu died of natural causes on 14 February 1995 at his home in Yangon s Bahan Township at the age of 87 after his wife Mya Yi 1910 1993 died 19 They had five children San San daughter Thaung Htaik son Maung Aung son Than Than daughter and Cho Cho daughter See also editHistory of BurmaReferences edit Parrott Sheffer Chelsey 2009 U Nu Britannica Retrieved 10 January 2023 Thakin Nu Burma Under the Japanese 15 Richard Butwell U Nu of Burma 44 45 Thakin Nu Burma Under the Japanese 108 Richard Butwell U Nu of Burma 52 UNB peoplewinthrough com Archived from the original on December 20 2021 Retrieved Jan 8 2023 University of Belgrade Honorary Doctors Archived from the original on 2012 05 03 Retrieved 2012 06 11 Smith Martin 1999 06 01 Burma Insurgency and the Politics of Ethnicity Bloomsbury Academic p 158 ISBN 978 1 85649 660 5 see the Rangoon Guardian and The Working People s Daily of 28 October 1966 concerning the news items of U Nu s release from custody The English translation of U Nu s interim report or proposals could be read in the 3 June 1969 issues of the Rangoon Guardian and the Working People s Daily McCoy Alfred W 2003 The Politics of Heroin CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade Lawrence Hill Books ISBN 1 55652 483 8 The news item that former Prime Minister U Nu and wife Mya Yi arrving sic back at Rangoon airport at 3 30 pm in the afternoon of 29 July 1980 can be read in the 30 July 1980 issues of the Rangoon Guardian and the Working People s Daily Prager Nyein Susanne Feb 2013 Aung San Suu Kyi Between Biographical Myth and Hard Realities Journal of Contemporary Asia 3 43 546 554 doi 10 1080 00472336 2013 771942 S2CID 154402781 Frasch Tilman 2013 John Whalen Bridge and Phana Kit asa ed The Relic and the Rule of Righteousness Reflections on U Nu s Dhammavijaya Palgrave Macmillan pp 127 128 a b Burma Buddhism and Neutralism See It Now Youtube 3 February 1957 Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved 12 August 2011 a b Sahliyeh Emile F 1990 Religious resurgence and politics in the contemporary world SUNY Press pp 39 40 ISBN 978 0 7914 0382 2 King Winston L 2001 In the hope of Nibbana the ethics of Theravada Buddhism Vol 2 Pariyatti p 295 ISBN 978 1 928706 08 3 Smith Donald Eugene 1965 Religion and Politics in Burma Princeton University Press p 142 U Nu Dies Reuters February 14 1995Further reading editButwell Richard 1969 U Nu of Burma Stanford Stanford University Press Cady John 1960 A History of Modern Burma Cornell University Press Charney Michael W 2009 Ludu Aung Than Nu s Burma During the Cold War In Christopher E Goscha Christian F Ostermann eds Connecting Histories Decolonization and the Cold War in Southeast Asia 1945 1962 Washington DC amp Stanford California Woodrow Wilson Center Press amp Stanford University Press pp 335 355 Hunter Edward 1957 The People Win Through a play by U Nu New York Taplinger Publishing Co Smith Martin 1999 Burma Insurgency and the Politics of Ethnicity Dhaka University Press ISBN 1 85649 659 7 Tinker Hugh 1957 The Union of Burma Oxford University Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to U Nu Time Magazine cover The House on Stilts Time magazine cover story August 30 1954 U Nu s speech on Burmese independence January 4 1948 U Nu Centennial Birthday May 25 2007 Archived December 20 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Columbia Encyclopedia Encyclopaedia Britannica article Burma Looks Ahead Thaka Ala a political satire by U Nu BookRags U Nu U Nu s hundred of photo gallery at www pbase comPolitical officesPreceded byoffice created Prime Minister of Burma1948 1956 Succeeded byBa SwePreceded byBa Swe Prime Minister of Burma1957 1958 Succeeded byNe WinPreceded byNe Win Prime Minister of Burma1960 1962 Succeeded byNe Win Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U Nu amp oldid 1215272331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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